There is a meme going round Facebook called "15 Authors" in which you list (you guessed it) 15 authors who have "influenced you and that will always stick with you". This is mine...
1.
Joseph Heller --
Catch-22 is funniest book ever written - also: it's profound. Pity the fools who don't get it. [You know who you are].
2.
Sophocles -- his plays are masterpieces. I've read
Oedipus Rex five times, and it still gives me goose-bumps.
3.
Dan Dennett -- too many brilliant books to count.
Darwin's Dangerous Idea is arguably one of the best non-fiction books of the 90s. His "
Postmodernism and Truth" shaped my thinking significantly.
4.
Jorge Louis Borges -- author of innumerable mind-bending and beautiful short-stories. If you've not done so yet, listen to "The Library of Babel" (the mp3 is
here).
5.
John Stuart Mill --
On Liberty is his most important book, but his autobiography and
A System of Logic are also very good.
6.
Mancur Olson -- An economist actually worth reading.
The Logic of Collective Action and
Power and Prosperity are both must-reads. (The speculation about the origins of states in P&P is fantastic).
7.
Vladimir Nabokov -- I've not read enough of his work, but
Lolita is a disturbing, incisive study of obsession. His prose is sublime.
8.
Simon Blackburn -- I actually like only one of his books -
Think. The latter is the best single-volume introduction to philosophy. I read it at a pivotal time in my intellectual development.
9.
Steven Pinker -- possibly the best popularizer of science around. Like
Think, I read
How the Mind Works at a pivotal time: it was really the start of my interest in science as a whole, and psychology and evolution in particular.
The Blank Slate is also excellent.
10.
Jared Diamond --
Guns, Germs and Steel is in my opinion THE best non-fiction book of the 90s. Must. Read.
The Third Chimpanzee is also worth a read. (But avoid
Why is Sex Fun?)
11.
Cormac McCarthy --
The Road and
Blood Meridian are wonderful both. I've decided to read his entire oeuvre over the next couple of years.
12.
Paul Theroux -- his travel writing is something to behold. I'm not a huge fan of his fiction, other than
The Mosquito Coast.
13.
Richard Dawkins -- He's had a tremendous influence on me.
The Selfish Gene first introduced modern theoretical biology to me, and it's had a lasting impact.
The God Delusion inspired me to "come out" to my family as an atheist. His best book since
The Blind Watchmaker is
The Ancestor's Tale, if you haven't read it yet, do so.
14.
Malcolm Gladwell -- my favorite science journalist. I've read all three of his books (
Outliers is the best, followed by
Blink, then
The Tipping Point). He's actually on the list for his long-from
New Yorker essays. Have a look at his
archive.
15.
John Rawls --
A Theory of Justice is the
locus classicus of 20th century political philosophy. Reading it had an absolutely profound effect on me.